Tony McGarry and the deceased members of the
McGarry family, Ballyheelan.

Thur 19th Apr 8:00 pm

Pat Sweeney and John Middleton.

Fri 20th Apr 8:00 pm

Mary and John Sheridan and son Pat, Clonoose.

Sat 21st Apr 8:00 pm

Michael and Kathleen Briody, Clonlohan.

Servers: Donna Smith.
Jack O’Reilly.

Carrick

Sun
15th Apr 12 O’clock

Patricia O’Neill, Castlepolard.

Servers: Darragh Sheridan. Niall Briody.

Mon 16th Apr 9:30 am
Mass

Sun 22nd Apr 12
O’clock

Kathleen Reynolds, Carrickbane. Months Memory.

Servers: Darragh
Sheridan. Niall Briody.

Divine Mercy Sunday

God chose Sister Faustina to make known his
Merciful Love to the world. Sister Faustina came from a large but poor
peasant family near Lodz in Poland. After a few years of work as a domestic
servant, at the age of twenty she entered the Congregation of the Sisters of
Our Lady of Mercy. As a religious she performed the duties of cook, gardener,
and doorkeeper in several of the congregation’s houses. Pope John Paul II
declared her a Saint on 20th April 2000. She was canonised as the first Saint
of the New Millennium.

The Divine Mercy Chaplet

Our Lord said to Saint
Faustina:

Encourage souls to say the
Chaplet which I have given you... Whoever will recite it will receive great
mercy at the hour of death.... When they say this chaplet in the presence of
the dying, I will stand between My Father and the dying person, not as the
just Judge but as the Merciful Saviour....

Begin
with the Our Father, the Hail Mary and the Apostle's Creed:

Then, on the large bead before
each decade:

Eternal Father,
I offer you the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity, of Your Dearly Beloved
Son, Our Lord, Jesus Christ, in atonement for our sins and those of the whole
world.

On the ten small beads of each decade,
say:

For the sake of His sorrowful Passion,
have mercy on us and on the whole world.

Conclude with
(Say 3 Times):

Holy God, Holy Mighty One, Holy
Immortal One, have mercy on us and on the whole world.

From Hopes
and dreams to Despair

This Sunday marks the sinking of the Titanic in the early hours
of April 15th 1912. Built by Harland and Walff, Belfast, the 46,328 ton
Titanic, the world’s largest and most luxurious liner, was on her maiden voyage
with 2,227 passengers and crew, when she sank.

113 third class passengers, mostly poor Irish emigrants, boarded
at Cobh. As she finally steamed out into the Atlantic at 2 pm on 11 April,
Eugene Daly, and Irish piper, played Erin’s Lament.

Four days later when the Titanic reached the north Atlantic ice
fields, she ignored no fewer than six radio warnings of icebergs from other
ships in the area. Instead of slowing down to about four knots, as other
vessels did, the Titanic ploughed on at her full speed of 22 knots. Her owners
were more interested in making money than in the safety of their passengers.

The principal cause of the sinking was the cutting open of a
large gash in the left side of the ship after colliding with an iceberg,
fatally damaging six of the bulkheads. There is some evidence that the failure
of the rivets in this area made the opening bigger, letting in more water than
the ship could cope with. Ironically, the Titanic would not have suffered the
same damage, if she had hit the iceberg head-on, as the watertight compartments
would not have been so damaged.

There were 2,227 people on the liner, but only enough lifeboats
for 1,178. She was originally fitted with thirty-two lifeboats, but sixteen
were later removed—to save money. The White Star Line was notorious for its
meanness. Unbelievably, the few crew members saved from the Titanic had their
pay stopped at 2.20 am, the exact time she went down!

Fewer than one-third of those aboard, 705, mostly women and
children, were saved, while 1,522 were lost. More would have been lost in the
icy sea had the Cunard liner Carpathia not arrived on the scene twenty minutes
after the Titanic sank. Only one-quarter of the third-class passengers
survived—because the sixteen lifeboats were on the first-class deck.

Nearly all the engineers and stockers, 112, were lost as they
worked below deck to keep the engines running and the lights on during the
three hours until the liner finally went down bow first, in the calm but icy
sea at 2.20 am.

187 Irish passengers were saved, among them Kate Connolly from
Cortrasns and Julia Smyth from Pottlebawn, Kilcogy. They met at Ballywillian
train station and made their way from there to Queenstown, Cork.

It is said that Kate Connolly was the first to wake in her cabin
and pulled the other girls out of bed ’by the hair of their heads’ because they
were unwilling to take the reported accident seriously.

Several aspects of this tragedy speaks directly to us to-day.

It is a reminder of our vulnerability and our mortality. It
teaches us that despite all the achievements of science and technology—and they
are many—we can never have total control of our destiny.

We are always travelling into the unknown.

Station Masses: The
group market with ✔
have been booked for Station Masses.

Please
contact Fr Frank at 043 6681129 to organise Station Masses for your area

Group
1

Kilgolagh

Group
4

Carrick

Group
5

Moynagh
Up

Moynagh
Lr

Group
7

Clonlohan

Ballynamone

Killakeen

Group
9

Moydristan

Mullaghboy

Moate

Group
11 ✔

Omard

Relagh

Lossett

Group
13

Bracklagh

Carrickbane

Group
15

Tawlaght

Cortrasna

Shankill

Group
2

Maughera
Up

Maughera
Lr

Group
3

Freeduff

Cullaboy

Lisnadarragh

Group
6 ✔

Lavagh

Kilnahard

Fortland

Group
8

Ballyheelan

Aughakilmore

Garrison

Cappragh

Group
10

Turin

Killafassey

Crover

Lisduff

Group
12

Foxfield

Ballinarry

Bellsgrove

Group
14

Clonoose

Group
16

Carrickakillew

NOTICES

Death

We
remember in our prayers James Connelly, Moynagh, whose funeral took place on
Friday also Alfie Heaney, brother of Elsie Blakley, Tullyboy who died in
Lisburn on Saturday 7th April. May they rest in peace.

Divine Mercy Sunday

The first Sunday after Easter was set aside by Pope
John Paul II as a special day of devotion to the Divine Mercy, The
revelations to St. Faustina, a visionary who lived in the Pope’s own diocese
of Krakow, are a great gift to the whole church. Mercy is God’s great gift to
us.

Youth Volunteer
Of The Year Award

Congratulations
to Peter Mulligan who was awarded the above award by Cavan V.E.C.

It
is a great achievement and wall deserved.

It
will mean an award of €500 to the youth club and also a grant of €350 to the
club.

Last Respects.ie

If you would like to receive a free text
message with details of funerals arriving at St Mary’s Church Ballynarry then
text last109
to 51444. For more information
visit our website at www.lastrespects.ie

Collections

Ballynarry:7th
April € 474.96

Carrick :1st April€ 519.73

8th
April€ 519.90

Collection for St. Joseph’s Young Priests Society on
Holy Thursday € 325.00.

Trocaire:€
913.47

Eucharistic Congress Donation
Envelopes, dated
10th June, should be handed in no later than the weekend of the 5/6 May. This
collection is to help defray the cost of hosting the Eucharistic Congress.

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Epiphany

May the splendor of your majesty, O Lord, we pray, shed its light upon our hearts, that we may pass through the shadows of this world and reach the brightness of our eternal home. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

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About Ballymachugh

Ballymachugh Parish is located in the extreme south of County Cavan, Ireland. It borders the counties of Westmeath and Longford and is in the Diocese of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise. The irish name is Baile Mhic Aodha (Mac Hugh's Town).
The Parish of Ballymachugh stretching along the western shore of Lough Sheelin.
There are two Catholic churches in the parish. St Mary's Church Ballynarry - (built in 1831- restoration wrok in 2010) and St Mary's Church Carrick - (built in 1825-restoration work in 2005/06).
There is one Church of Ireland, Protestant Church in the parish. St Paul's Church Ballymachugh - (built in 1800 - restoration work in 2002/03).
Ballynarry Central National School was built in 1976.
There are many organisations in the Parish with the largest group being the GAA. The Club was formed in 1888 and the club colours are Green and Gold. The Club ground's known as Sheelin Park in located at Ballyheelan and was opened in 1993.